Today is the twentieth anniversary of a piece of legislation the Conservatives would rather forget about: the Local Government Finance Act 1988.
The Act introduced the ill-fated community charge (more commonly known as the poll tax) - a fixed rate local government tax payable by every adult in the UK regardless of income. Whilst exceptions were made for students and the unemployed, the charge was seen as shifting the tax burden from the rich to the poor and led to widespread civil disorder, including a riot in Trafalgar Square.
Following Margaret Thatcher’s downfall, John Major’s government abolished the charge and introduced the council tax, still in effect today and calculated on the basis of a property’s value.
Today, the three main parties have differing policies on how to reform council tax. The Conservatives, mindful of what the poll tax did for Thatcher, have pledged to democratise council tax by forcing councils who want to increase the tax over a certain, as yet unspecified, limit to put their proposals to a local referendum. The Liberal Democrats will replace the council tax with a local income tax based on people’s ability to pay rather than the value of their property. And the Labour Government? It “has no plans to change the system”.
Hat-tip for the anniversary: The Aberavon & Neath Liberal Democrats blog.













Comments
David Heigham / August 03 2008 5:51pm
It is worth remembering tha the poll tax was quite popular when introduced. What did for it -and at the same time damaged Britain's political health - was that it was easy to opt out of the Community Charge. All you had to do was drop off the electoral register. That meant those still on the register paid more next year. After a year or two of this, the tax was universally regarded as unfair; and as you say it lead to civil disorder.
The funny thing is that Margaret Thacher's Government actually said that this was why a poll tax would not work, and said so in advance. The reference is the Green Paper on Alternatives to Domestic Rates that they published.
Gary / August 05 2008 10:58am
I like the website but the magazine's design standards (I've only seen the first issue) need to be raised somewhat - looks like a student union rag